Tuesday, October 28, 2008

A prestigious science magazine reports on paranormal activities attributed to military bases. Are ghosts haunting places where the nation's heroes have served? Elsewhere, the same journal reports on investigations into reports of manifestations in Ghost Lusters: If You Want to See a Specter Bad Enough, Will You?

Well-known UFO investigator Bill Knell expands the reporting on the newest round of UFO sightings above Stephenville and Dublin, two small towns in Texas. Was the US Air Force Reserve exercising training flights in the area when a huge UFO was seen by several eyewitnesses? Are there radar records of the unknown object? What's the possibility the object is a secret US craft? Elsewhere, Alien Casebook Frontier offers a gallery of footage from one individual in Alberta, Canada Man Films Boat Like UFO Sighting.

On Sunday, a long time, avid outdoorsman saw two giant birds, probably 10 to 15 feet above the ground. The birds had a wing span of at least 10 feet. What were they?

Our Very Own Haunted House Haunted America Tours
One of the deans of high strangeness writers and researchers is Brad Steiger, author of the acclaimed Otherworldly Affaires and many other works, tells the tale of experiences he and his family had when they moved into an Iowa farmhouse still occupied by the spirit of the man who built it. Meanwhile, reports are coming out that Lisa Lee Harp Waugh Will Attempt to Astral Project Her Living Spirit Form on Halloween.

Micah Hanks reviews the work of Ann Druffel and D. Scott Rogo, The Tujunga Canyon Contacts, an examination of the true stories of five young women who resided in or near Tujunga Canyon northeast of Los Angeles, CA. The abduction experiences continued for over twenty years, having begun in 1953. Meanwhile, Bruce Duensing examines the receptiveness of those who experience abductions or other paranormal events in Down on the Farm of Intermediate States.

A television news report from Shreveport, LA, shows an unknown object above that city, and, thus far, no one has been able to identify the object satisfactorily. With video.

Massachusetts has developed a reputation for ghostly presences due to the state's antiquity. It has also developed a reputation for its mysterious Bridgewater Triangle. But the Isaac Winslow house may take the paranormal cake as the stomping grounds of the ghost of Penelope Winslow, a widow who died in 1704. With photos. Elsewhere, there are more spooky occurrences to examine in 'The Haunting' at Caledonia Wine Cottage, and there's a follow up report in Shadow Figure, Unknown Voices, Flying Objects...

The Search for the Buru Lancaster Eagle-Gazette
Marc Miller is a psychologist and cryptozoologist in Ohio. After reading Loren Coleman’s book, Cryptozoology A to Z, he became interested in the Buru, a large, unknown lizard thought by some to have lived in the remote valleys of the Himalayas of Assam in the northeast corner of India. Coleman mentioned that the journalist, Ralph Izzard, among others, had led an expedition in 1948 in search of the Buru. After obtaining Izzard’s journal, Miller attempted to follow his exact expedition. The first in a five-part series. Elsewhere, Filming Migo, the monster of Lake Dakataua.

Derek Bartlett of the Cape and Islands Paranormal Research Society, and Keith Johnson of New Anomalies Research go on record as having warned people to take caution when delving into the paranormal. According to Johnson, "If you call for something to come in, it might answer. It might not leave when you want it to. There are forces beyond our control." Do you still want to be a ghost hunter? If the previous story leaves you undeterred, you need to read up on how you can stay safe and still have fun, as explained in Halloween: Season of the Spontaneous Investigator.

From the "maverick science" files: Research has shown hydrogen sulfide, the gas that gives a rotten egg smell to flatulent emissions, relaxes blood vessels, lessening blood pressure. No doubt we all know some people whose blood pressure must be approaching dangerously low levels. And, in a far less frivolous sounding project, Professor Wallace Thornhill attempts to make sense of the formation of our planetary system around a seemingly unrelated star in Assembling the Solar System. With many images.

Werewolf Radio There's Something in the Woods
Nick Redfern, author of There's Something in the Woods, and Tim Beckley, author of The Big Book of Werewolves, talk about one of their favorite subjects with Captain Jack at Paranormal Radio. Downloadable online broadcast. Meanwhile, in England, Witches Pardon Petition Launched

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